Recognizing culture problems and actively involving your team in pursuing change will prove far more effective than «leadership talk» with no action.
Not exact matches
Clearly, Callahan
recognizes that anthropology is central to the
problem; he notes that our
culture places «excessive emphasis on choice and self - determination,» and that this compels us to want to find a human decision behind every death.
Niebuhr himself
recognized the additional type in which
culture controls the church, but used it only to state the
problem of defining what the Christian alternatives ought to he.
Many concussion experts [3,13,16]
recognize that concussion education, while important, is not likely to increase reporting by itself - a fact buttressed by the findings of several recent studies [13, 14, 16,17,18] that suggest that greater concussion knowledge alone does not change reporting attitudes - and that a multi-pronged approach to the
problem is required, including creating a safe reporting environment and working to change the
culture.
Despite the roadblocks, those shaping science policy and those working at the bench clearly
recognize the
problems with China's current research
culture: It wastes resources, corrupts the spirit, and stymies innovation.
Key focus areas of the workshop will include: •
Recognizing and understanding leadership in a science setting • Using negotiation as a tool in scientific discussions and
problem solving • Identifying and resolving conflicts in the lab • Dealing with difficult people and situations in a scientific setting • Communicating your ideas and plans in a way that engages others • Leading productive scientific team and project meetings • Setting goals for and giving useful feedback to scientists • Creating a positive lab
culture • Identifying, interviewing and hiring the best scientists for your team.
I think the arts need to be
recognized as valuable by the
culture at large before budget cuts and funding
problems resolve themselves.
Different
cultures have their own ways of dealing with
problems, and they have different views on animals, I
recognize that.
The real
problem is that we simply don't have time to address AGW by making changes to fundamental institutions of human
cultures, whether those be education, or religion, or government, or economics, or the pathological anthropocentrism that at present pervades them all, and then waiting for a few generations for those changes to transform all the various human societies around the globe into ones that are prepared to fully
recognize and deal with the
problem.
Shifting
culture in the public sector and the justice sector to accepting a «learn as we go» approach will take time but it is time to
recognize that the potential benefits of this approach do outweigh the short term costs on these critical social
problems.